About This Book
The narrative traces a Creole New Orleans household and its wider social circle through intimate domestic scenes, chance encounters, and civic disturbance. A young woman's presence and the everyday rituals around verandas, supper-tables, and walks provoke quietly observed exchanges across generations and racial lines. Episodes range from parlor conversations and small-town curiosity to legal business, public unrest, and questions of inheritance, moving the community from complacency toward upheaval. Detailed local color, attention to speech and custom, and a steady focus on social manners and transformation bind the episodes into a meditation on continuity and change in a closing traditional world.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
Bonaventure: A Prose Pastoral of Acadian Louisiana
by George Washington Cable
Bylow Hill
by George Washington Cable
Dr. Sevier
by George Washington Cable
Gideon's Band: A Tale of the Mississippi
by George Washington Cable
John March, Southerner
by George Washington Cable
Kincaid's Battery
by George Washington Cable
You May Also Like
6 picks
"All's not Gold that Glitters;" or, The Young Californian
by Alice B. Haven
"Bring Me His Ears"
by Clarence Edward Mulford
"Browne's Folly" / (From: "The Doliver Romance and Other Pieces: Tales and Sketches")
by Nathaniel Hawthorne
"Forward, March": A Tale of the Spanish-American War
by Kirk Munroe
"Gentlemen prefer blondes"
by Anita Loos
"George Washington's" Last Duel / 1891
by Thomas Nelson Page